Publication | Open Access
Phosphatidylcholine Homeostasis and Liver Failure
145
Citations
29
References
2005
Year
In mammals, the only endogenous pathway for choline biosynthesis is the methylation of phosphatidylethanolamine to phosphatidylcholine (PC) by phosphatidylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PEMT) coupled to PC degradation. Complete choline deprivation in mice by feeding Pemt(-/-) mice a choline-deficient (CD) diet decreases hepatic PC by 50% and is lethal within 5 days. PC secretion into bile is mediated by a PC-specific flippase, multiple drug-resistant protein 2 (MDR2). Here, we report that mice that lack both PEMT and MDR2 and are fed a CD diet survive for >90 days. Unexpectedly, the amount of PC also decreases by 50% in the livers of Mdr2(-/-)/Pemt(-/-) mice. The Mdr2(-/-)/Pemt(-/-) mice adapt to the severe choline deprivation via choline recycling by induction of phospholipase A(2), choline kinase, and CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase activities and by a strikingly decreased expression of choline oxidase. The ability of Mdr2(-/-)/Pemt(-/-) mice to survive complete choline deprivation suggests that acute lethality in CD-Pemt(-/-) mice results from rapid depletion of hepatic PC via biliary secretion.
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